<B>One of the last great memoirs of World War II, <i>Into the Cold Blue</i> is a riveting account of the air war over Europe, when hell was four miles above the earth.</B><BR><BR>A born daredevil, John Homan joined the Army Air Forces after Pearl Harbor. Three years later he was co-piloting a B-24 Liberator over Nazi Germany, raining death and destruction on the enemy. This first-person account of his harrowing adventures—flying through deadly skies filled with red-hot bursts of flak, watching airmen fall from the sky with parachutes aflame—will leave you staggered by the courage and grit of those young warriors.<BR><BR>Fighting the enemy in the air seemed the perfect way for Homan to channel his restless, energetic spirit in wartime, but he could never have imagined the horrors that awaited him in September 1944. Part of an airborne armada over Nazi-occupied Holland, his plane punched full of holes, his left tail shot away, a tire blown to bits, Homan wondered how he could